chronicle

IPA: krˈɑnɪkʌɫ

noun

  • A written account of events and when they happened, ordered by time.

verb

  • To record in or as in a chronicle.
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Examples of "chronicle" in Sentences

  • A history, as opposed to a chronicle, is a running narrative that depends to a large extent on the imagination of the historian.
  • This chronicle is profoundly erudite, thoroughly engrossing, satisfyingly hefty (700-plus pages!), and delightfully idiosyncratic.
  • During the Middle Ages the term chronicle included every form of history, but the word in its earliest usage signified simply a chronological table.
  • The book contains the Old Testament, the New Testament, a necrology of the Podlazice monastery, a list of Podlazice fraternity members, a script on natural history, the oldest Czech Latin chronicle – there are eleven contents items in all.
  • One striking — and troubling — aspect of Mr. Lebrecht's chronicle is the importance he gives to recordings, an importance that inevitably raises the question of whether recorded performances have influenced our attitude to Mahler's music and that of many other composers.
  • This chronicle is as much an homage to noble elders who often struggle to surmount indifference in their own communities as it is an op-ed by the author, who sounds the alarm among a skeptical public, and even other scientists, about the incalculable loss posed by a language's extinction.
  • The full chronicle is a initial symbol for print materials, spirit gear, etc; a delegate symbol is streamlined with a ostracism of a Wildcats legs for have make have make use of of of of upon group unvaried elements (jerseys, caps; if it were to be used for alternative jaunty teams, it would work for an glorious football steel sheet logo).

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synonyms for chronicledescribing words for chronicle
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